Tom Homan has crisscrossed America since President-elect Donald Trump named the former cop and immigration official his border czar, promising “shock and awe” alongside the biggest deportation the US has ever seen.
The Department of Justice says a top Trump administration official is in Chicago this weekend to “personally observe” immigration enforcement actions by multiple agencies.
CHICAGO (AP) — Top Trump administration officials, including “border czar” Tom Homan and the acting deputy attorney general, visited Chicago on Sunday to witness the start of ramped-up immigration enforcement in the nation’s third-largest city.
The cities, from Chicago to San Diego, have doubled down by reaffirming local ordinances to prohibit local law enforcement from assisting federal authorities in immigration removal operations.
Firefighters are responding Wednesday to a brush fire in Rancho Bernardo. The fire started around 8:55 a.m. near Bernardo Center Drive and Camino del Norte, according to San Diego Fire-Rescue, which was responding alongside Poway Fire.
Not one but two brush fires had air support from San Diego Fire-Rescue be impacted by drones in the air near the firefight.
Ron Marinaccio, who was designated for assignment earlier this week, has been sent from Chicago to San Diego in exchange for cash considerations.
San Diego and Chicago leaders have vowed to defy Tom Homan by protecting undocumented migrants from deportation.
But wherever Homan goes, from New York City to Texas, he’s zeroed in on two cities he plans to target in the first days of Trump’s new presidency: San Diego and Chicago.
Saying that “America’s sovereignty is under attack,” President Donald Trump’s declaration of a border emergency comes at a time of relative calm after years of deep turmoil.
The San Diego Padres made an intriguing move Friday afternoon, acquiring former Yankees bullpen arm Ron Marinaccio from the Chicago